Self-Care vs Self-Love and Why Your Bubble Baths Aren't Working | EP 81 cover art

Self-Care vs Self-Love and Why Your Bubble Baths Aren't Working | EP 81

Self-Care vs Self-Love and Why Your Bubble Baths Aren't Working | EP 81

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🎧 WHAT'S INSIDE THIS EPISODE Are you checking all the self-care boxes—bubble baths, yoga classes, face masks—but still feeling completely exhausted and empty? What if the problem isn't that you need MORE self-care, but that you're missing the deeper work of self-love? Today we're breaking down the crucial difference between self-care and self-love, and why one without the other keeps you trapped in the burnout cycle. In This Episode: • The critical difference between self-care (what you DO) and self-love (how you FEEL about yourself) • Why self-care without self-love actually makes burnout worse • The three practical steps to build self-love: awareness, reconnection, and real-time compassion • How to use winter as a cocoon period for self-discovery instead of another season to hustle • What happens when you lose yourself in motherhood (and how to find yourself again before your kids leave home) 💙 WHY THIS MATTERS TO YOU If you're like most overwhelmed moms, you've been told that self-care is the answer to your exhaustion. Take a bath. Get your nails done. Have a coffee date. And you've tried—you really have. But here's what nobody tells you: all the bubble baths in the world won't fill the void if you don't actually believe you're worthy of that care. This episode is for the mom who's lost herself completely in motherhood. The one who can't remember the last time she did something just because she wanted to—not because her kids needed it, not because work required it, not because the house was falling apart. You're checking the self-care boxes but still feeling depleted, guilty, and empty. The truth? You're treating self-care like another to-do list item instead of addressing the root cause: you've fundamentally stopped believing you matter. This episode will show you how to practice self-love—the internal work that makes all those external self-care activities actually meaningful. It's about reclaiming who you are underneath all those roles you play, and building a relationship with yourself that sustains you long after the kids grow up. 🔑 KEY TAKEAWAYS Self-care is external action; self-love is internal relationship. Think of self-care as washing your car and self-love as maintaining the engine. You can have the shiniest car on the block, but if the engine's broken, you're not going anywhere. Both matter, but without self-love, self-care becomes just another way to feel guilty and inadequate. The brutal self-talk trap. Most overwhelmed moms say things to themselves they would never say to their children or best friends. For one week, catch yourself in negative self-talk and ask: "Would I say this to my daughter?" If the answer is no, you don't get to say it to yourself either. Your thoughts literally create your reality—start paying attention to what's happening in your mind. Five minutes of reconnection changes everything. You don't need a complete identity overhaul or a week-long retreat. Start with just five minutes a day doing ONE thing that makes you feel like yourself—not mom, not employee, not partner. Just you. Maybe it's a song from high school, journaling one page, or sitting in your car before going inside. What matters is building the relationship with yourself, because when your kids eventually need you less, you need to know who you are. Winter is your cocoon, not your starting line. Stop treating January like a time to hustle harder, set new goals, or transform yourself. Winter is nature's rest period. Instead of resolutions and productivity, use this season to be still and figure out who you're becoming. Treat yourself like someone who's been through something hard—because you have—not like a problem to be fixed. Self-compassion in real time is the deep work. When you're yelling at your kids and the mom guilt hits, that's your moment. Instead of spiraling into "I'm a terrible mother," flip the script: "I'm having a hard moment. I'm overwhelmed. I'm doing the best I can with what I have right now." Say it out loud so your kids hear you modeling how to handle big emotions. This isn't making excuses—it's treating yourself with the same emotional regulation you're trying to teach your children. 🎁 RESOURCES MENTIONED Free Coaching Call: Ready to dig into what's specifically keeping you stuck? Book a free 30-minute coaching call at nataliemccabe.com Join the Community: Connect with other overwhelmed moms working through this journey in Natalie's free community at nataliemccabe.com/community Related Episodes: Episode on Childhood Sensory Experiences (referenced in this episode)Post-Holiday Burnout RecoveryMom Rage Regulation Techniques 📲 CONNECT WITH NATALIE Instagram: @natalie_mccabe_official Facebook: Natalie McCabe Website: nataliemccabe.com 💬 WHAT RESONATED WITH YOU? Drop a comment and let me know—which takeaway hit home for you? Are you practicing self-care without self-love? What's one tiny thing you're going to do this week ...
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